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author | Kegan Dougal <kegan@matrix.org> | 2014-08-29 13:50:25 +0100 |
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committer | Kegan Dougal <kegan@matrix.org> | 2014-08-29 13:50:31 +0100 |
commit | 898dde881217d00d39a5d7a0e5d20dad6821b344 (patch) | |
tree | 15d5aea69026c5194d39fdf4993a472d1ab29c0c /docs/specification.rst | |
parent | Don't break if the call ends before it connects (diff) | |
download | synapse-898dde881217d00d39a5d7a0e5d20dad6821b344.tar.xz |
Flesh out API standards.
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/specification.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/specification.rst | 85 |
1 files changed, 81 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/docs/specification.rst b/docs/specification.rst index c1559c886c..d4a01a3fc2 100644 --- a/docs/specification.rst +++ b/docs/specification.rst @@ -132,10 +132,87 @@ Identity API Standards ------------- -- All HTTP[S] -- Uses JSON as HTTP bodies -- Standard error response format { errcode: M_WHATEVER, error: "some message" } -- C-S API provides POST for operations, or PUT with txn IDs. Explain txn IDs. +All communication in Matrix is performed over HTTP[S] using a Content-Type of ``application/json``. +Any errors which occur on the Matrix API level MUST return a "standard error response". This is a +JSON object which looks like:: + + { + "errcode": "<error code>", + "error": "<error message>" + } + +The ``error`` string will be a human-readable error message, usually a sentence +explaining what went wrong. The ``errcode`` string will be a unique string which can be +used to handle an error message e.g. ``M_FORBIDDEN``. These error codes should have their +namespace first in ALL CAPS, followed by a single _. For example, if there was a custom +namespace ``com.mydomain.here``, and a ``FORBIDDEN`` code, the error code should look +like ``COM.MYDOMAIN.HERE_FORBIDDEN``. There may be additional keys depending on +the error, but the keys ``error`` and ``errcode`` MUST always be present. + +Some standard error codes are below: + +:``M_FORBIDDEN``: + Forbidden access, e.g. joining a room without permission, failed login. + +:``M_UNKNOWN_TOKEN``: + The access token specified was not recognised. + +:``M_BAD_JSON``: + Request contained valid JSON, but it was malformed in some way, e.g. missing + required keys, invalid values for keys. + +:``M_NOT_JSON``: + Request did not contain valid JSON. + +:``M_NOT_FOUND``: + No resource was found for this request. + +Some requests have unique error codes: + +:``M_USER_IN_USE``: + Encountered when trying to register a user ID which has been taken. + +:``M_ROOM_IN_USE``: + Encountered when trying to create a room which has been taken. + +:``M_BAD_PAGINATION``: + Encountered when specifying bad pagination query parameters. + +:``M_LOGIN_EMAIL_URL_NOT_YET``: + Encountered when polling for an email link which has not been clicked yet. + +The C-S API typically uses ``HTTP POST`` to submit requests. This means these requests +are not idempotent. The C-S API also allows ``HTTP PUT`` to make requests idempotent. +In order to use a ``PUT``, paths should be suffixed with ``/{txnId}``. ``{txnId}`` is a +client-generated transaction ID which identifies the request. Crucially, it **only** +serves to identify new requests from retransmits. After the request has finished, the +``{txnId}`` value should be changed (how is not specified, it could be a monotonically +increasing integer, etc). It is preferable to use ``HTTP PUT`` to make sure requests to +send messages do not get sent more than once should clients need to retransmit requests. + +Valid requests look like:: + + POST /some/path/here + { + "key": "This is a post." + } + + PUT /some/path/here/11 + { + "key": "This is a put with a txnId of 11." + } + +In contrast, these are invalid requests:: + + POST /some/path/here/11 + { + "key": "This is a post, but it has a txnId." + } + + PUT /some/path/here + { + "key": "This is a put but it is missing a txnId." + } Receiving live updates on a client ---------------------------------- |